Tools and solutions for EU public sector institutions
Give visitors, researchers and educators clear access to your collections, exhibitions and learning programmes through a museum website that supports accessibility, multilingual content and compliant public sector publishing.
When opening times, exhibition dates, venue details or public programme information change, delays in updating the website can mislead visitors and create avoidable enquiries for front-of-house staff. This is especially difficult when several departments contribute content and approvals are unclear.
Museums often need to publish object records, curatorial text, image rights information and interpretive content in ways that work for both the public and specialist audiences. Without a clear structure, collection pages become difficult to navigate, inaccessible for some users and hard for staff to maintain consistently.
Visitors expect a straightforward path from discovering an exhibition or event to booking a ticket, reserving a place or planning a group visit. When booking tools sit outside the website without clear links, context or language support, users drop out and staff spend more time answering routine questions.
School visits, workshops and public learning events often require registrations, capacity limits, consent handling and follow-up communication. If this is managed through email chains or inconsistent forms, it becomes difficult to track attendance, protect personal data and give teachers or participants clear information.
You can publish exhibitions, talks, tours and seasonal events in a consistent format, with clear dates, locations, access information and related content. This makes it easier for visitors to understand what is on, and easier for your team to keep listings accurate across the site.
You can present collections with structured object pages, searchable records, image galleries, interpretive text and multilingual descriptions. Content can be organised so casual visitors, researchers and educators can all find what they need without wading through unclear navigation.
You can connect exhibition pages, visitor information and booking journeys so people can move smoothly from interest to action. Whether you use an external ticketing provider or an existing booking process, the website can guide users clearly while preserving your museum's branding and information standards.
You can manage registrations for school visits, workshops and public learning programmes through clear forms, capacity controls and confirmation flows. Personal data can be handled with GDPR-aware processes, helping your team collect only what is needed and manage requests more responsibly.
You can publish visitor information, collection content and programme pages in multiple languages while maintaining consistent structure and governance. The website can be planned around WCAG 2.1 AA requirements, helping more people access your content, including users relying on assistive technologies.
Yes. We plan museum websites around recognised public sector accessibility needs, including WCAG 2.1 AA requirements. That covers areas such as keyboard navigation, colour contrast, page structure, alternative text, form usability and clear content patterns, so your website is more usable for all visitors and easier to maintain responsibly.
In many cases, yes. We assess your current ticketing, event booking or visit reservation setup and design a clear journey around it, so visitors can move from exhibition information to booking with less friction. Where third-party systems are involved, we also consider branding, language handling, privacy requirements and the practical limits of the provider.
We structure the website so your teams can manage content in multiple languages with clear ownership and publishing workflows. This helps curatorial, communications, education and visitor services staff contribute content without losing consistency. We also account for review and approval processes that are common in public institutions.
Yes. We are used to working in environments where procurement, documentation, security review and compliance matter. We can support a delivery approach that aligns with public sector expectations, including GDPR-aware data handling, clear scope definition, stakeholder sign-off and collaboration with internal IT or external procurement teams.